Child Mining in Tanzania: A Forgotten Story
By Tony Spence
Children are often attracted to mining due to a lack of regulation and the promise of easy money. As a result, thousands of children in Tanzania work in difficult and dangerous conditions for little money in which their education, safety and wellbeing is compromised.Street Games Soothe Woes of Zimbabwe´s Jobless Youths
By Ray Mwareya
Zimbabwe's idle youths, bending under a reality of 80% joblessness, and an economy stuffed by $9, 9 billion in external debt, are now hooked to playing or owning a “snooker” table.A Soul-Searching Moment for African Youths
By Nantale Sanyu Sarah
For a country to develop, it ought to be as a whole not as mere individuals, family lines and tribes.How Children are Trafficked and Sold into Bonded Labour in India
By Aarthi Gunnupuri
18-year-old Adhir Pasvan from the east Indian state of Bihar, was trafficked and turned into a slave at a shoe manufacturing unit 1200 miles away from home. According to government reports, an astonishing 100,000 children go missing in India every year and many of them are never found.